Low-tech, low-cost solutions connecting India’s farmers
FEATURE |
NAITALE — Sanjay Sathe stood by his vines in a sweeping agricultural belt outside the city of Nashik in western India and punched a number into his mobile phone.
“Hello, it’s Sanjay Sathe,” the 36-year-old grape and tomato farmer announced in the local language, Marathi, as if talking to a friend. “Is it going to rain tomorrow?”
The voice at the other end of the line told him there would be 25 millimeters (one inch) of rain and temperatures would be a cool 24 degrees (75 Fahrenheit).
He was also told how best to treat a furry white substance he had noticed on some of his leaves.
Farmers like Sathe are increasingly being seen as key customers in India’s competitive mobile phone market, as the number of subscribers across the country grows at staggering rates.
Source: The Daily Tribune
URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20100905com7.html
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